Ramaphosa’s five-point emergency plan to tackle gender-based violence
The plan, announced during during an extraordinary joint sitting of Parliament, will be implemented over the next six months.
President Cyril Ramaphosa (R) speaks to a crowd of tens of thousands protesting outside parliament against gender based violence following a week of brutal murders of young South African women in Cape Town, South Africa, 05 September 2019. Picture: EPA-EFE / NIC BOTHMA
President Cyril Ramaphosa on Wednesday announced a five-point emergency plan to put a halt to gender-based violence during an extraordinary joint sitting of Parliament.
The five points are prevention, strengthening the criminal justice system, enhancing the legal and policy framework, ensuring adequate care, support and healing for victims of violence and strengthening the economic power of women.
The plan will be implemented over the next six months.
Prevention
“In implementing our prevention measures, we must recognise that violence against women is not a problem of women. It is a problem of men,” Ramaphosa said.
This part of the plan entails the following measures:
– A mass media campaign that will target communities, public spaces, workplaces, campuses, schools and recreational spaces like taverns. The focus will be on men’s groups and formations, youth at risk and offenders inside prisons.
– Women’s rights and gender power relations will be part of Life Orientation in the school curriculum.
– Gender-sensitivity training for law enforcement officials, prosecutors, magistrates and policymakers. Those who are found in breach of their responsibilities in this regard will be held to account.
– Train and deploy prevention activists to all of 278 municipalities. They will engage in household visits and community interventions focused on changing harmful social norms.
Strengthen the criminal justice system
“This is to ensure that justice is served, perpetrators are held to account, survivors do not suffer secondary victimisation, and the law acts as a deterrent,” Ramaphosa said.
It includes the following measures:
– Directing resources to improve the functioning of sexual offences courts, Thuthuzela care centres, and the Family Violence, Child Protection and Sexual Investigation Units of the SAPS;
– Funding has already been approved for the establishment of an additional eleven sexual offences courts over the next financial year; and
– The Department of Justice and Constitutional Development will clear the backlog of criminal cases for rape and other forms of gender-based violence through the establishment of special courts, hiring additional court staff and clearing the backlog at forensic labs.
Enhance the legal and policy framework
“Since the advent of democracy, we have enacted several laws and undertaken a number of programmes to tackle gender inequality in our society, to promote human rights and to enable effective action against gender-based violence,” Ramaphosa said.
“In many respects, however, these measures have fallen short of what is needed to confront the severity of the challenges we face.”
The measures to improve the legal and policy framework are:
– Proposing a range of legal and regulatory reforms to Parliament to strengthen the response of the State to gender-based violence and to ensure that all crimes against women and children attract harsher minimum sentences.
– Engaging with the judiciary on the role that it can play in supporting the national effort to end gender-based violence to ensure abusers, rapists and murderers know that they will be caught and punished. The State should oppose bail for suspects charged with the rape and murder of women and children and those who are found guilty of such crimes should not be eligible for parole.
– Strengthen programmes to rehabilitate offenders and youth at risk. Finalise legislation like the Victim Support Services Bill, which will strengthen support for GBV programmes and services.
– Ramaphosa called on all parliamentary committees to prioritise these areas of legislative reform and ensure that we have effective legislation in place without delay.
Ensure adequate care, support and healing for victims of violence
Measures in this part of the plan are:
– Standardising the framework for funding civil society organisations working with survivors of gender-based violence;
– Providing post-rape training for healthcare providers and lay counsellors who provide care and support to victims and survivors;
– Working with the private sector, concerned individuals and other institutions to substantially increase the number of Thuthuzela care centres across the country from the current 54 to over 100 by 2025;
– Meet with representatives of the private sector to discuss the establishment of a Gender-based Violence and Femicide Fund to increase support to survivors, including persons with disability and the LGBTQI+ community;
– As drug and alcohol abuse fuel gender-based violence, the Department of Social Development has been tasked with increasing the visibility of substance abuse awareness and education and prioritising funding for more treatment facilities; and
– Resource the gender-based violence framework in universities and colleges, which will include the establishment of gender equity offices in these institutions. Ramaphosa will meet the universities’ vice-chancellors to come up with initiatives that are focused on what should be done at institutions of higher learning.
Improve the economic power of women
“Women are often hostages in abusive relationships because of poverty and unemployment. Young women, in particular, are vulnerable to exploitation from older men with financial resources. By tackling unequal economic power dynamics we can reduce the vulnerability of women to abuse,” Ramaphosa said.
This will include the following measures:
– Prioritise women when it comes to access to employment, training opportunities and procurement of services, and call upon the private sector to do the same;
– Reach the target to set aside 30% of the value of its procurement for women-owned businesses, and to progressively increase that to 40%;
– Prioritise support and training for women engaging in small business and informal sector activity, and call on established business to be part of this effort;
– All government departments will be expected to adhere to gender-responsive planning, budgeting, monitoring and evaluation; and
– Improve collection and analysis of data to monitor our GBV programmes.
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